Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05KUWAIT2618
2005-06-13 08:09:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Kuwait
Cable title:  

KUWAIT: TIP ACTION PLAN REVIEWED WITH THREE SENIOR

Tags:  PHUM KCRM KWMN PGOV PREL ELAB SMIG KU 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 002618 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEA/ARPI, G/TIP

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/11/2015
TAGS: PHUM KCRM KWMN PGOV PREL ELAB SMIG KU
SUBJECT: KUWAIT: TIP ACTION PLAN REVIEWED WITH THREE SENIOR
OFFICIALS; U/S DOBRIANSKY OP-ED CARRIED IN TWO DAILIES

REF: A. STATE 108156

B. KUWAIT 2551

C. STATE 102469

D. KUWAIT 2375 AND PREVIOUS

Classified By: Ambassador Richard LeBaron for reasons 1.4 (b and d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 002618

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEA/ARPI, G/TIP

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/11/2015
TAGS: PHUM KCRM KWMN PGOV PREL ELAB SMIG KU
SUBJECT: KUWAIT: TIP ACTION PLAN REVIEWED WITH THREE SENIOR
OFFICIALS; U/S DOBRIANSKY OP-ED CARRIED IN TWO DAILIES

REF: A. STATE 108156

B. KUWAIT 2551

C. STATE 102469

D. KUWAIT 2375 AND PREVIOUS

Classified By: Ambassador Richard LeBaron for reasons 1.4 (b and d)


1. (C) Summary: Post has delivered TIP action plan to three
senior Kuwaiti officials, including a Senior Advisor to the
Prime Minister and the President of the National Security
Bureau, who both stressed that the GOK views trafficking and
other human rights as serious issues. In addition, two
Kuwaiti dailies carried U/S Dobriansky's op-ed on the TIP
report, and Kuwaiti editorialists continue to focus on human
rights isses. Post is seeking a meeting to review the plan
with Minister of Social Affairs and Labor, Faisal Al-Hajji,
who is currently traveling. End Summary.


2. (C) The Ambassador delivered ref. A TIP action plan to
Senior Advisor to the Prime Minister Mohammed Abulhasan
during their June 11 meeting. Stressing that action needed
to be taken quickly, the Ambassador noted that the U.S. would
be looking for the completion of specific achievements, not
just for the formation of committees. He said that the
current situation in which domestic laborers such as maids
are not covered under Kuwaiti labor law is unacceptable, and
extending better protections to domestic employees would be
an important step in righting Kuwait's poor record in
protecting expatriate labor. He added that establishing
provisions for how to react if a laborer is abused and
developing a system to safeguard and repatriate underage
camel jockeys would also be critical. (Ambassador gave
Abulhassen a copy of the TIP suggestions, as well as the
recent report and the definitions of the tiers.)


3. (C) Agreeing that poor treatment of laborers was against
both religious and secular law, Abulhasan said that the GOK
Council of Ministers had taken up the matter. He said the
cabinet had called for greater action by the Social Affairs

and Labor Ministry, in coordination with the Ministry of
Interior, which is responsible for workers currently not
protected by Kuwaiti labor law. He said the International
Labor Organization (ILO) had also raised similar concerns
with Al-Hajji, who had already moved to protect camel jockeys
by issuing a letter threatening to revoke licenses for race
operators who permitted the use of minor camel jockeys.
Abulhasan promised to raise the plan with appropriate
authorities.


4. (C) The Ambassador also discussed TIP issues and the
need for a coordinated national plan for combating human
trafficking during a June 12 meeting with Shaykh Sabah
Al-Khaled Al-Sabah, President of the National Security
Bureau. Noting that he had raised the issue as a "security"
issue in a recent speech to the Kuwaiti Armed Forces Staff
College, (http://kuwait.usembassy.gov/may 25 2005.html),
Ambassador stressed the importance of achieving tangible
results and again identified as an area for immediate action,
measures to give legal protection to Kuwait's many domestic
workers. Shaykh Sabah Al-Khaled said the GOK was "keen to
tackle" the trafficking issue and reiterated that the
Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor had begun working with
the Interior and Foreign Ministries on TIP matters. He added
that Kuwait, as a society, was paying more attention to human
rights issues and the GOK hoped NGOs would play a more active
role in combating TIP. He further commented that although
domestic workers were not covered under existing labor law,
the Kuwaiti constitution, other laws, and Islam offered
protection that the GOK would provide. He asserted Kuwait's
commitment to combating TIP, but intimated that GOK efforts
were often hampered by the embassies of the sending countries
which did not encourage unhappy or unemployed workers to
return home.


5. (U) DCM delivered the action plan to MFA Director for
Western Hemisphere Affairs Khalid Babtain on June 12.
Babtain said the Minister of Social Affairs and Labor had
been assigned cabinet responsibility for trafficking issues.


6. (U) Two Kuwait papers published Arabic language versions
of U/S Dobriansky's op-ed on trafficking. On June 9, Arabic
daily Al-Qabas (circulation 65,000),Kuwait's paper of record
for intellectuals and academics featured the Undersecretary's
remarks, and on June 12, Al-Seyasseh (circulation 45,000),a
respected paper with a focus on pan-Arab and regional issues,
followed suit. Trafficking issues are still frequent topics
among Kuwait's leading editorial writers. Newly appointed
Minister of Planning, Dr. Massouma Al-Mubarak, published an
op-ed in Arabic daily Al-Anba on June 12 in which she noted
the U.S. has made human rights a central focus of its foreign
policy.

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LEBARON